The United States, NATO and the European Union launched a commission to prevent election interference Friday.

Former NATO chief and Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen and former Homeland Security secretary Michael Chertoff announced the Transatlantic Commission on Election Integrity in Washington at a press conference.

Concrete measures to prevent election meddling needs to happen as soon as possible, Chertoff, one of the commission’s co-chairs said. There will be over 20 elections across the U.S. and Europe over the next year and a half, but there’s still no reliable means to prevent election meddling, he said.

“There’s no sign that Russians and others who have meddled in the past have any reason to stop now,” Chertoff said. “We have to treat this with urgency.”

The commission will focus on finding solutions to three major election meddling strategies: manipulation of social media, tampering with social infrastructure and leaking classified documents.

The Alliance of Democracies Foundation, an international non-profit, created the commission. Other members of the commission include former Vice President Joe Biden, former President of Mexico Felipe Calderon and former ABC and CNN anchor Jeanne Meserve.

The commission got its start through funding by Rasmussen’s business, political consulting firm Rasmussen Global, but other companies have contributed funding. Microsoft provided $300,000 to finance the commission.

While some members of the United States Congress and European Union have been in talks with the commission, they have not checked with the White House or any government body about starting work on this issue. Despite collaboration with government and business actors, the commission itself is independent.